Q3)Garderobe was a Medieval word for toilet: especially ones in castles. The term — or room, depending on who you ask — ALSO described a storage room for what … ?

A3)Clothes. (In some parts, they’re the SAME room: the smell was supposed to protect clothes from fleas. I believe it. Thousands WOULDN’T, of course …)

Q4)What — usually — would be the first thing activated on the Space Shuttle, once astronauts unbuckled themselves in orbit … ?

A4)The Toilet. (Apparently, it operates with a complicated series on fans … … … )

Q5)Honey trucks and honey wagons are terms used for the tankers that empty what … ?

A5)Cesspits and cesspools and potable toilets. (And that’s BEFORE I get onto the phrase gong-farmer … !)

Q6)And finally … in which year did the Great Stink — guess what of — prompt Parliament to build the London sewer system …?

A6)1858. (Incredibly, it’s only NOW, a century and a half or so later, that people are thinking of expanding it.)

Enjoy those, everyone.

Given today’s subject, I’ll leave you with the theme from the ITV documentary, The World At War: a series I still consider to be television’s last word on the subjectª.

And with this quote from Robert H Jackson, the US chief prosecutor at the Trials

“The wrongs which we seek to condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant, and so devastating, that civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored, because it cannot survive their being repeated. That four great nations, flushed with victory and stung with injury stay the hand of vengeance and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the law is one of the most significant tributes that Power has ever paid to Reason.”

Robert H. Jackson, Chief US Prosecutor.

* It’s from Pertwee’s first season, Debbiº: the one with the Martians … ? (As distinct from Ice Warriors.) It’s fairly well know in some circles, actually: it’s one of the few early Pertwee stories that’s been reconstructed from all sorts of sources.

º And, yes, you’re right, Debbi, they usually ARE a bit different: that’s part of the show’s charm, I always think. (Mind you, this one’s VERY different: Pertwee’s first season was very different from the later ones he did. Ambassadors of Death treats the Brigadier as less of a Colonel Blimp, for starters … !)

ª Handily, it ALSO feature Jimmy Stewart as an interview subject: he was a front-line pilot for the USAAF.